W. Stokes Boney House
W. Stokes Boney House is a historic house located at 651 East Southerland Street in Wallace, Duplin County, North Carolina. It is locally significant as a highly unusual two-story frame house notable for the eighteen-degree inward bend of the prominent side gabled main block.
W. Stokes Boney House | |
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Location | 651 E. Southerland St., Wallace, North Carolina |
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Coordinates | 34°44′31″N 77°59′09″W |
Area | 17.8 acres (7.2 ha) |
Built | 1878 | -1890
Built by | W. Stokes Boney, George Blanton |
Architectural style | Greek Revival |
MPS | Duplin County MPS |
NRHP reference No. | 99000812[1] |
Added to NRHP | July 8, 1999 |
Description and history
It was built between 1878 and 1890 by mill owner and farmer W. Stokes Boney, and is a two-story, Greek Revival style wood-frame dwelling with a side gable roof and 18 degree inward bend. The house features a full-width, double-tiered engaged porch. Also on the property are the contributing smokehouse (c. 1850) and grape arbor (1890).[2]
It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on July 8, 1999.[1]
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gollark: Like literally all academic papers, this feels written by palaiologos.
gollark: ↑ LyriCLy
gollark: A regular tree structure lets us generate the tessellation C combinatorially.The tessellation will be generated lazily, let G be the set of tiles generated sofar. For every g ∈ G, we keep the following information: its state q(c), and forevery i = 0 . . . Nt − 1, its connection e(g, i), which is either a pointer to anothertile g′ ∈ G and an index i′ (meaning that edge i of g connects to edge i′ of g′)or NULL (meaning that we do not know this connection yet).
gollark: It would be difficult for a server-side thing.
References
- "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
- Emily Browder Lee (March 1999). "W. Stokes Boney House" (pdf). National Register of Historic Places - Nomination and Inventory. North Carolina State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved 2014-10-01.
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